A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Department of Education’s attempt to cancel an estimated $250 million in teacher-training grants.
The lawsuit centers on the fate of two programs: the Teacher Quality Partnership (TQP) and Supporting Effective Educator Development (SEED), which Congress established in 2008 and 2011, respectively. These initiatives were designed to address teacher shortages in rural and urban areas, as well as encourage college students in STEM fields—science, technology, engineering, and math—to pursue careers in K-12 education.
According to the department, the defunded programs had been used to train future educators in “inappropriate and unnecessary topics,” such as critical race theory—a set of ideas that racism is deeply embedded in the culture and institutions of society; DEI; and social justice activism. Some of them also incorporated race-based teacher recruitment and staffing strategies.
As for TQP and SEED, a termination letter sent to grant recipients outlined several potential justifications for the cuts, stating that the affected programs may have taken part in DEI initiatives; violated federal civil rights law; conflicted with the department’s policy of “prioritizing merit, fairness, and excellence in education”; been subject to fraud, abuse, or duplication; or otherwise failed to “serve the best interests of the United States.”
They also contend that the abrupt cancellations have disrupted teacher workforce pipelines, forced them to rely on underqualified educators, and destabilized local education systems.
Joun agreed, ruling that the department’s decision lacked a clear explanation. He also found that the states were entitled to preliminary relief, noting that teacher training programs were already being canceled and staff members laid off in states such as California, Massachusetts, and New Jersey.
“The record shows that if I were to deny the [temporary restraining order], dozens of programs upon which public schools, public universities, students, teachers, and faculty rely will be gutted,” he wrote.
Based on a preliminary review of available evidence, Joun concluded that the states are likely to succeed on the merits of their claims.
The Education Department did not respond to a request for comment on the ruling.